Book Value

Investment Vehicles High Relevance

The net tangible worth of a company per share, calculated as (total assets minus intangible assets minus total liabilities minus preferred stock par value) divided by common shares outstanding. Uses tangible assets only, excluding goodwill and other intangibles. Also called net tangible worth per share. Commonly used in the price-to-book (P/B) ratio to assess whether a stock is overvalued or undervalued relative to its tangible accounting value.

Example

A company with $500 million in total assets (including $50 million in intangibles), $200 million in liabilities, no preferred stock, and 20 million shares outstanding. Tangible assets = $500M - $50M = $450M. Book value per share = ($450M - $200M) Ă· 20M shares = $12.50. If the stock trades at $25, the P/B ratio is 2.0 ($25 Ă· $12.50), meaning investors pay $2 for every $1 of tangible book value.

Common Confusion

Book value reflects accounting (historical) values, not current market values. A stock trading below book value is not automatically undervalued—the company may have declining assets, obsolete inventory, or poor earnings prospects. Book value is most meaningful for asset-heavy industries (banks, real estate) and less relevant for technology or service companies with significant intangible assets.

How This Is Tested

  • Calculating book value per share using tangible assets minus liabilities minus preferred par, divided by common shares
  • Identifying which assets count as tangible (excluding goodwill, patents, intangibles)
  • Determining whether a stock is trading above or below tangible book value using P/B ratio
  • Understanding when book value is meaningful (asset-heavy industries) versus when it is not (intangible-heavy companies)
  • Recognizing that book value uses historical cost accounting, not current market value

Calculation Example

Scenario: A corporation has total assets of $750 million (including $100 million in intangible assets), total liabilities of $450 million, no preferred stock, and 25 million common shares outstanding.
Formula: Book Value per Share = (Total Assets - Intangibles - Total Liabilities - Preferred Par) Ă· Common Shares
Steps:
  1. Identify total assets: $750 million
  2. Identify intangible assets (goodwill, patents, etc.): $100 million
  3. Calculate tangible assets: $750M - $100M = $650 million
  4. Identify total liabilities: $450 million
  5. Identify preferred stock par value: $0 (none outstanding)
  6. Calculate tangible book value: $650M - $450M = $200 million
  7. Identify common shares outstanding: 25 million
  8. Calculate book value per share: $200M Ă· 25M = $8.00 per share
Result: The book value per share is $8.00. If the stock currently trades at $12.00, the P/B ratio is 1.5 ($12 Ă· $8), indicating investors are willing to pay $1.50 for every $1 of tangible book value.

Regulatory Limits

Description Limit Notes
Book value per share calculation formula (Total Assets - Intangibles - Total Liabilities - Preferred Par) Ă· Common Shares Uses tangible assets only; excludes goodwill, patents, and other intangibles. Also called net tangible worth per share. Subtracts preferred stock par value.
Price-to-Book (P/B) ratio Market Price per Share Ă· Book Value per Share P/B < 1 means stock trades below tangible book value; P/B > 1 means above book value

Example Exam Questions

Test your understanding with these practice questions. Select an answer to see the explanation.

Question 1

Robert, a value investor, is analyzing two regional banks. Bank A has a book value per share of $40 and trades at $50 (P/B of 1.25). Bank B has a book value per share of $35 and trades at $28 (P/B of 0.80). Both banks have similar earnings and dividend yields. Robert believes Bank B is undervalued because it trades below book value. Which statement about this analysis is most accurate?

Question 2

What does a company's book value represent?

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Question 3

A corporation has total assets of $960 million, total liabilities of $540 million, and 30 million shares outstanding. What is the book value per share?

Question 4

All of the following statements about book value are accurate EXCEPT

Question 5

A technology company has total assets of $800 million (of which $600 million are intangible assets like patents and goodwill), total liabilities of $300 million, and 25 million shares outstanding. The stock currently trades at $40 per share. Which of the following statements are accurate?

1. The company's book value is $500 million
2. The book value per share is $20
3. The P/B ratio is 2.0
4. Book value is likely a highly reliable valuation metric for this company

💡 Memory Aid

Think of book value as the tangible accounting report card. Book Value per Share = (Tangible Assets - Liabilities - Preferred Par) Ă· Common Shares—what common shareholders get after selling physical assets, paying debts, and paying preferred stockholders. Excludes intangibles like goodwill. Remember: uses historical costs, not current market prices. A stock trading below book value might be a value trap if assets are declining—always ask WHY the market disagrees with the books.

Related Concepts

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